Maloney v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.

26 S.W. 702, 122 Mo. 106, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 45
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 24, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 26 S.W. 702 (Maloney v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maloney v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co., 26 S.W. 702, 122 Mo. 106, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 45 (Mo. 1894).

Opinion

Bubuess, J.

This is an action by plaintiff against the defendant as common carrier for damages for the loss of household goods by fire by reason of the negligence of defendant while in transit over its road from Harrisonville to Independence, Missouri. Upon issue joined, by.consent of the parties plaintiff and defendant, John A. Sea was appointed referee to examine the account and make report. On the ninth day of March, 1891, the referee filed his report.

On March 11, 1891, defendant filed exceptions to the report of the referee as follows:

“Comes now defendant and makes the following exceptions and objections to the report of the referee [110]*110filed herein; and defendant says: First. That said report is against the law (in that the amount allowed "plaintiff is not the lawful and true amount that the ■defendant, if liable, ought to pay plaintiff). Second. That it is against the evidence and the law under the ■evidence. Third. That the referee erred in rejecting 'testimony offered by defendant. Fourth. That the referee erred in admitting testimony offered by plaintiff. Fifth. That the plaintiff by requesting his name •signed to the bill of lading or contracts in evidence, •and by accepting duplicates thereof, and claiming and receiving benefits thereunder, became, was and is firmly bound by the terms and conditions thereof, as if the •same and each of them had been read and explained to Mm before the same were signed. Sixth. That under the facts in evidence, the burden of proof is on plaintiff to show such negligence upon the part of defendant before plaintiff could be entitled to a recovery, and that rsuch proof was not made in said cause. Seventh. That the referee erred in finding the defendant liable to this plaintiff for goods which the petition and evidence ; showed were the property of Rosa Crawford and Maggie Barton. Fighth. That under the facts found by the referee, his conclusion should have been that the ‘defendant was not liable for, or on account of, the loss ■of any part of the property mentioned. Ninth. That ■the finding of the referee is against the weight of the •evidence. Tenth. That the referee erred in his con- ■ elusions as to what -the evidence introduced tended to prove.”

On the same day defendant filed its motion for judgment, which is as follows: “Comes now said defendant and moves the court for a judgment in its favor, upon the report of the referee herein filed for thd -reasons: First. That upon the facts found in said report, the finding of the referee should have been in [111]*111favor of the defendant instead of the plaintiff; Second. That upon the facts found by the referee, as the same are stated in said report, the judgment of this' court should be for the defendant. Third. That the facts found by the referee, under the law of this case, ■are not consistent with the findings of facts therein stated.”

On April 10, 1891, exception number 1 to the referee’s report was sustained. On September 15,1891, the case was again referred to the referee with instructions to take such additional evidence touching the value of the-property alleged to have been destroyed as might be introduced by either party and to report his finding to the court.

•The referee, after having heard the evidence as to. the value of the goods destroyed in obedience to the ■order of the court, made his report November 7, 1891. Court adjourned on the same day to the twenty-first ■day of November next thereafter when it again adjourned to December 19, 1891.. On December 19, 1891, defendant filed its exceptions to the report of the referee:

■ ‘Now comes said defendant and excepts to the report of the referee filed herein, of the seventh day of November, 1891, and says that said report is contrary to the weight of evidence in the case, and is in fact without any evidence to support it;- that the amount of the finding of the referee is excessive, no such amount being warranted by the evidence in the case, and that the conclusion of the referee, namely, that plaintiff was entitled to recover, is contrary to the law, and against the weight of evidence.”

On the same day, the motion for judgment which had been filed by defendant on the eleventh day of March, 1891, was submitted to the court and taken under advisement; the following order was entered on record:

[112]*112“Now on this day come the parties hereto, and by their respective attorneys, and defendant files exceptions-to report of referee, and defendant’s motion for judgment on report of referee filed March 11 being taken up, fully seen, heard and considered, is by the court-taken under advisement.”

And afterwards, on the same day, defendant filed its amended exceptions, which are as follows:

“Now comes said defendant, and by leave of the court files its amended exceptions to the report of the-referee herein filed, and says: First. Said referee admitted illegal evidence against the objections of defendant. Second. Said referee excluded legal and proper evidence offered by defendant. Third. The report of said referee is against the weight of evidence, and is in fact without any evidence to support it. Fourth. The amount found by the referee is excessive,, no such amount being warranted by the evidence. Fifth. The conclusion of the referee, that plaintiff is-entitled to recover, is contrary to law and against the weight of evidence in the case. Sixth. The finding should have been for the defendant. Seventh. The plaintiff’s petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.”

On the same day the court adjourned until January 9, 1892. On January 9,1892, the motion for judgment, filed by defendant March 11, 1891, was, by the court, overruled and defendant excepted. April 23, 1892, defendant’s exceptions to the report of the referee were overruled and the finding and report of the referee sustained by the court and judgment rendered for the plaintiff for $2,701.28, the amount which the referee found plaintiff was entitled to recover, to all of which defendant excepted. On the' same day court adjourned to May 14, 1892, and on that day defendant filed its-[113]*113motion for a new trial and in arrest of judgment, which being overruled, it appealed to this court.

Plain tiff contends that there is nothing before us for review, because of the failure of the defendant to file its motion for a new trial within four days after the trial. Upon the other hand the contention of the defendant is that the statute, section 2243, Revised Statutes, 1889, which provides that “all motions for new trials and in arrest of judgment shall be made within four days after the trial, if the term shall so long continue; and if not, then before the end of the torm,” means four judicial days, or in other words, the four first days that the court is in session after the trial, and that as the court, on the tenth day of April, 1891,, sustained defendant’s first ground of exception, and at the next term sent the case back to the referee again, not for a new trial, but for the purpose of taking additional evidence on and reconsidering the question of value, and that was all that was done until the second reference, . that the second report was not a substitute for but supplemental to the first,- and that the first was not.

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Bluebook (online)
26 S.W. 702, 122 Mo. 106, 1894 Mo. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maloney-v-missouri-pacific-railway-co-mo-1894.